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ScienceDaily: Plants & Animals News |
When tyrannosaurs dominated, medium-sized predators disappeared Posted: 17 Jun 2021 07:12 AM PDT A new study shows that medium-sized predators all but disappeared late in dinosaur history wherever Tyrannosaurus rex and its close relatives rose to dominance. In those areas -- lands that eventually became central Asia and Western North America -- juvenile tyrannosaurs stepped in to fill the missing ecological niche previously held by other carnivores. |
Public concern on human health impact of plastic pollution Posted: 16 Jun 2021 07:06 PM PDT The new study found that both Europeans and Australians were highly concerned about the human health impact of marine plastic pollution, ranking it top of 16 marine-related threats in terms of cause for concern, including chemical or oil spills, marine biodiversity loss and climate change related effects such as sea-level rise and ocean acidification. |
Children with asymptomatic malaria a 'hidden risk' to disease control efforts Posted: 16 Jun 2021 04:15 PM PDT The role of people infected with malaria without showing symptoms presents a hidden risk to efforts to control the disease after they were found to be responsible for most infections in mosquitoes, according to a new study. |
Seabird eggs contaminated with cocktail of plastic additives Posted: 16 Jun 2021 04:15 PM PDT Chemical additives used in plastic production have been found in herring gull eggs, new research shows. |
Social secrets of killer whales discovered using drones Posted: 16 Jun 2021 04:15 PM PDT Killer whales have complex social structures including close 'friendships', according to a new study that used drones to film the animals. |
New beetle species discovered and named after iconic sci-fi heroines Posted: 16 Jun 2021 04:15 PM PDT Entomologists have discovered more than three dozen species of ambrosia beetles -- beetles that eat ambrosia fungus -- previously unknown to science. |
Underwater robot offers new insight into mid-ocean 'twilight zone' Posted: 16 Jun 2021 04:15 PM PDT An innovative underwater robot known as Mesobot is providing researchers with deeper insight into the vast mid-ocean region known as the 'twilight zone.' Capable of tracking and recording high-resolution images of slow-moving and fragile zooplankton, gelatinous animals, and particles, Mesobot greatly expands scientists' ability to observe creatures in their mesopelagic habitat with minimal disturbance. |
Bats in Switzerland harbor diverse viruses, some potentially zoonotic Posted: 16 Jun 2021 12:42 PM PDT An analysis of 18 species of stationary and migratory bats living in Switzerland has discovered that they harbor viruses from 39 different viral families -- including some viruses with the potential risk of jumping to other animals, including humans, and causing disease. |
Yeast mating -- more than meets the eye Posted: 16 Jun 2021 11:32 AM PDT Researchers have discovered a surprising asymmetry in the mating behavior of unicellular yeast that emerges solely from molecular differences in pheromone signaling. Their results might shed new light on the evolutionary origins of sexual dimorphism in higher eukaryotes. |
New super-resolution microscopy method approaches the atomic scale Posted: 16 Jun 2021 11:32 AM PDT Scientists have developed a computational technique that greatly increases the resolution of atomic force microscopy, a specialized type of microscope that 'feels' the atoms at a surface. The method reveals atomic-level details on proteins and other biological structures under normal physiological conditions, opening a new window on cell biology, virology and other microscopic processes. |
Machine learning can now reduce worry about nanoparticles in food Posted: 16 Jun 2021 11:31 AM PDT While crop yield has achieved a substantial boost from nanotechnology in recent years, the alarms over the health risks posed by nanoparticles within fresh produce and grains have also increased. In particular, nanoparticles entering the soil through irrigation, fertilizers and other sources have raised concerns about whether plants absorb these minute particles enough to cause toxicity. |
Damage control: Plants juggle genome maintenance and growth by being organized Posted: 16 Jun 2021 11:30 AM PDT Researchers have found that plants balance growth and genome maintenance by organizing their responses to damage. Plants can't replace dead cells as animals do, and must deal with DNA damage without halting growth. Combined control of the plant hormones cytokinin and auxin allows plants to organize different DNA damage responses while minimizing cell death. This study will have broad applications to research on plants and other organisms. |
Link found between gut microbes and stroke Posted: 16 Jun 2021 08:38 AM PDT New findings show that the gut microbiome impacts stroke severity and functional impairment following stroke. The results lay the groundwork for potential new interventions to help treat or prevent stroke. |
Poison frog tadpoles can survive (almost) anywhere Posted: 16 Jun 2021 08:38 AM PDT A group of researchers were part of an expedition to French Guiana to study tropical frogs in the Amazon. Various amphibian species of this region use ephemeral pools of water as their nurseries, and display unique preferences for specific physical and chemical characteristics. Researchers were surprised to find tadpoles of the dyeing poison frog surviving in an incredible range of both chemical (pH 3-8) and vertical (0-20 m in height) deposition sites. |
Measuring the elimination of plastic particles from the body in mice Posted: 16 Jun 2021 08:38 AM PDT The accumulation of micro- and nanoplastics in the environment continues at an alarming rate. A radiolabeling technique made it possible to monitor the movement and accumulation of plastics in the mouse body, as well as their elimination from it. |
How long-known genes continue to surprise researchers Posted: 16 Jun 2021 08:38 AM PDT Proteins are encoded by genes - however, this information is divided into small coding sections, which are only assembled during a process called splicing. Various combinations are possible, some of which are still unknown. |
Bacteria used to clean diesel-polluted soil in Greenland Posted: 16 Jun 2021 08:37 AM PDT Diesel-polluted soil from now defunct military outposts in Greenland can be remediated using naturally occurring soil bacteria according to an extensive five-year experiment in Mestersvig, East Greenland. |
New study finds fresh evidence for our inevitable death Posted: 16 Jun 2021 06:41 AM PDT Philosophers, artists and scientists - and probably all the rest of us - have long obsessed over the key to human immortality. We all, no matter our income, culture or religion are bound to die. Even if we escape mortal diseases or accidents, we all face a deadly biological deterioration. While the debate of human longevity has divided the scientific community for centuries, a new study finds fresh evidence for our inevitable death. |
Keeping strawberries fresh using bioactive packaging Posted: 16 Jun 2021 06:41 AM PDT Québec produces more strawberries than any other Canadian province. Strawberries are delicate and difficult to keep fresh. In response to this challenge, researchers have developed a packaging film that can keep strawberries fresh for up to 12 days. |
Compounds derived from hops show promise as treatment for common liver disease Posted: 16 Jun 2021 06:41 AM PDT Research suggests a pair of compounds originating from hops can help thwart a dangerous buildup of fat in the liver known as hepatic steatosis. |
Urbanization drives antibiotic resistance on microplastics in Chinese river Posted: 16 Jun 2021 06:40 AM PDT Microplastic pollution of waterways has become a huge concern, with the tiny pieces of plastic entering food webs and potentially having harmful effects on animals and people. In addition, microplastics can act as breeding grounds for antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Now, researchers have analyzed antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs) on five types of microplastics at different locations along the Beilun River in China, finding much higher abundances in urban than rural regions. |
Fossil research shows woodlice cousins roamed Ireland 360 million years ago Posted: 16 Jun 2021 06:38 AM PDT The old cousins of the common woodlice were crawling on Irish land as long as 360 million years ago, according to new analysis of a fossil found in Kilkenny, Ireland. |
Posted: 15 Jun 2021 11:56 AM PDT What will the Earth be like for our children and grandchildren, as temperatures continue to rise? We can be fairly certain of some things: Some regions will become inhospitable, as heat drives their inhabitants away or causes massive declines and changes in their ecosystems. Many other physical, chemical and biological processes will also be affected by rising temperatures that threaten critical ecosystem services such as food production, biodiversity and energy security. |
Posted: 15 Jun 2021 10:23 AM PDT Hippopotamus aren't the first thing that come to mind when considering epidemiology and disease ecology. And yet these amphibious megafauna offered ecologists a window into the progression of an anthrax outbreak that struck Ruaha National Park, Tanzania, in the dry season of 2017. |
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